Inter-American Division

Sabbath School Members Partner with Community Center to Feed the Homeless in St. Croix

St. Croix, US Virgin Islands

North Caribbean Conference Staff
Members of the Peter’s Rest Adventist Church in Christiansted, St. Croix, US Virgin Islands, serve hot meals to dozens of homeless persons in the city who come to the Lighthouse Mission, a non-profit organization with which they partner twice or three times per month. Church members under the Community Services Department donate food items and take time to prepare them at the center almost every Sunday of the month. [Photo: North Caribbean Conference]

Members of the Peter’s Rest Adventist Church in Christiansted, St. Croix, US Virgin Islands, serve hot meals to dozens of homeless persons in the city who come to the Lighthouse Mission, a non-profit organization with which they partner twice or three times per month. Church members under the Community Services Department donate food items and take time to prepare them at the center almost every Sunday of the month. [Photo: North Caribbean Conference]

For seven months, Sabbath School members from the St. Peter’s Rest Adventist Church in St. Croix, US Virgin Islands, have been assisting the homeless in the town of Christiansted, in coordination with Lighthouse Mission, a non-profit organization on the island. Both organizations partner to supply meals two or three times each month.

Lighthouse Mission is a faith-based community service center that is committed to enriching the lives of people by serving, encouraging, teaching, and challenging children and adults alike to find meaning and purpose in life through faith. The mission once provided a haven, with after-school activities, for children. That service has been discontinued, pending a refurbishment of the building, which was affected by hurricanes in recent years, mission leaders said.

When Pastor Earl Daniel, former pastor of the Peter’s Rest Adventist Church, requested approval from the church board for the partnership, the board agreed unanimously. “You could sense the Holy Spirit in the room—in that board meeting. How could we not serve the community?”

Five groups of church members organized through the Community Services provide the items and prepare the meals in the center every second and fourth Sunday of each month. They get to feed, connect, encourage, and hold worship services at the open pavilion in the yard of the center, church leaders said. Sometimes, the mission requests the Adventist group to assist the third Sunday. The center also serves as a food and clothing pantry.

Church members of the Peter’s Rest Adventist Church in St. Croix, US Virgin Islands, serve take-out trays after preparing dozens of warm meals for the homeless who visit the Lighthouse Mission every week. [Photo: North Caribbean Conference]
Church members of the Peter’s Rest Adventist Church in St. Croix, US Virgin Islands, serve take-out trays after preparing dozens of warm meals for the homeless who visit the Lighthouse Mission every week. [Photo: North Caribbean Conference]

Dr. Henry Peters, Sabbath School director of the North Caribbean Conference, was pleased with the response of the local church. “The church must respond to the needs of people in the community, and we must be a good, cooperative citizen,” said Peters, Adding that Jesus commissioned His people to care for each other. “This initiative is a prime example of how Jesus ministered while He was on the earth, for Jesus ministered to people’s needs and loved them before He shared the Word with them.”

“We praise the Lord for the partnership we have with the community,” said Abraham Kennedy, pastor of the Southgate Baptist Church and manager of the Lighthouse Mission. “It’s great to share the space—to make a difference in the community.” Kennedy has been at the church for 13 years and said the center has assisted those in need for 27 years. “This is a common ground for people to come around and share ministry.”

Lillian Jeffers, Sabbath School leader at Peter’s Rest Adventist Church, used to volunteer at the Lighthouse Mission before the partnership began in August 2021. “For the past two years, I had personally volunteered at the Lighthouse when I lost my job in 2020,” she said. “It’s very gratifying to have my church come alongside this ministry.”

The group serves 20–30 meals every Sunday, Jeffers added. “The people who look forward to the hot meal frequent the Christiansted town area, sleeping wherever they can lay their heads. When they come in the morning, you can see they are not rested.”

Youth ministries leaders at the Peter’s Rest Church recently gathered a group of young people who selected the center as a location to benefit during the Adventist World Church’s Global Youth Day activities in March 2022.

“We desire to have the children exposed to real-life situations,” said Jeffers. “We encourage parents to bring their children along for the ministry opportunity. It is good to see happy faces on those who come to the center and receive help.”

Young people pause to pray before assisting in feeding the homeless during Global Youth Day in March 2022. [Photo: North Caribbean Conference]
Young people pause to pray before assisting in feeding the homeless during Global Youth Day in March 2022. [Photo: North Caribbean Conference]

Herman Ravariere, head elder of the Adventist congregation, said partnerships with other community organizations are key to building relationships in the community. “If any one of us walks down the street and sees the people, they know us. These connections are wonderful. It tells people that, ‘Hey, the Adventists do care!’”

Adventists across several sister churches on St. Croix support the Community Services initiative and partnership with Lighthouse Mission every month.

Ending homelessness may not be possible, said Jeffers. “We know that’s not going to happen, but we’re going to take a big bite out of it.”

Peter’s Rest Adventist Church suffered extensive damages when the fire broke through the sanctuary in 2020. Nearly 300 members meet partly downstairs and under a tent erected for overflow outside.

This article was originally published on the Inter-American Division’s website

Related articles

Subscribe for our weekly newsletter